Rapper FIRST time REACTION to Bobby Gentry - Ode to Billy Joe! WOW

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • #bobbygentry #reaction
    Rapper FIRST time REACTION to Bobby Gentry - Ode to Billy Joe! WOW
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Komentáře • 926

  • @MysteryChristy
    @MysteryChristy Před 7 dny +264

    This is a Southern Gothic ballad. Haunting.

    • @kathalinehansen7078
      @kathalinehansen7078 Před 7 dny +1

      Google definition
      Southern Gothic particularly focuses on the South's history of slavery, racism, fear of the outside world, violence, a "fixation with the grotesque, and a tension between realistic and supernatural elements".
      Here is video discussion on the history of Southern gothic literature.

    • @jannasomewhere2889
      @jannasomewhere2889 Před 7 dny +1

      It's definitely morbid and oppressive (lack of vitality of the characters in the story ... there's the dead, and the walking dead, and not much of anyone else). Yeah, could see this a Faulkner short story.

  • @dobybrown7839
    @dobybrown7839 Před 7 dny +240

    I'm a grown ass man been listening to this song for 50 years and it still brings me to tears

    • @barbarastrayhorn4667
      @barbarastrayhorn4667 Před 7 dny +5

      Same here. I've heard it 50 times. It still moves me.

    • @ilonahesseling4821
      @ilonahesseling4821 Před 4 dny +2

      Same here. I know this song for 50 years. It still gives me goosebumps.

    • @mamaloh8165
      @mamaloh8165 Před 2 dny +1

      me too. I had the single record when I was 15.

  • @johncondon4081
    @johncondon4081 Před 7 dny +305

    This song is, in my opinion, the best minimalist song ever. She pulls in the listener, and like a great storyteller, keeps us interested and in wonder.

    • @d.t.r.8036
      @d.t.r.8036 Před 7 dny +20

      And with that hauntingly beautiful voice, it stays with the listener long after other songs would have faded away

    • @jannasomewhere2889
      @jannasomewhere2889 Před 7 dny

      "Red River Valley" (4 chords, 8 notes, 9 bars) surpasses "Ode to Billy Joe" in musical simplicity and singability. It is incredibly poignant, and the emotions it evokes don't require the lyrics to be sung. The melody itself is sweet and haunting. The tune has been adapted for other songs in multiple genres and languages.
      And then there's "Frere Jacques" (3 chords, 7 notes, 8 bars). It has been used to label a circuit rank number in cheminformatics as a nod to its extreme simplicity. It can be sung as a round. It's been around a couple hundred years, and young kids the world over still sing it, many with lyrics in their own language. The melody became the basis of a song by protestors in Tiananmen Square.
      Both "Red River Valley" and "Frere Jacques" are folk songs. Folk songs, more or less by definition, have stood the test of time. Melodies as simple as RRV and FJ become touchstones in a musical collective memory. It's difficult for ANY record-label song of Boomer America to measure up to that kind of durability, broad appeal and adaptability. Mostly because these songs are culturally bounded and very few achieve timeless appeal. ALL products of record-label Boomer America have yet to be tested by time, so I'm skeptical of all GOAT claims concerning these songs. (many of which I enjoy, some of which have been mainstays in my life) The undertow of solipsism with Boomer culture is incredibly strong, and I think we have very little idea what society or individual lives will look like when Boomerism passes once and for all. Radically different, most likely. And don't be surprised if Boomer music slips off to the horizon like (the legendary image of) a Viking funeral ship. Not very "greatest ever." It just sucked all the oxygen out of the room while it was here.
      I can't see "Ode to Billy Joe" breaking out of its very specific cultural boundaries or being anything but an obscure relic in 150-200 years. That doesn't mean it isn't a top-notch song for its time and place. And perhaps it could be the "best minimalist song" of record-label Boomer America. But my word, the world is much, much, much bigger than that.

  • @daleb1279
    @daleb1279 Před 7 dny +167

    She is a strong, smart and unique lady. This is her signature song, but she also wrote and performed the song Fancy, which Reba McEntire would later have a huge cover hit with. She grew tired of the music and show business industry after about a decade but she was also a founding owner of the Phoenix Suns basketball team and she is still living but has chosen to stay out of the public limelight for several decades now. She's lived her life on her own terms. Very talented lady.

    • @philipem1000
      @philipem1000 Před 7 dny +2

      As many have said what you missed is that she and Billy Joe add something going on. Personally I think they broke up and she's feeling massive guilt about what happened.

  • @Amber-mv8wz
    @Amber-mv8wz Před 7 dny +360

    The unintentional cruelty is even deeper than you realize because they ignored all the clues that their own daughter/sister was Bobby's girlfriend. She's finding out he's taken his own life & listening to her family dismiss it as next to nothing.

    • @tulelazule6914
      @tulelazule6914 Před 7 dny +9

      i think it came out in '66.

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 Před 7 dny +17

      I think it’s open. She had some sort of very close relationship with him. Whether they were boyfriend/girlfriend, whether they were best friends that confide in each other, or whether they were best friends and she also loved him, which he either didn’t know about, or couldn’t return. So there are at least four possibilities, but all sad and tragic in this situation.
      My best guess is that they were best friends but she also secretly loved him. He confided in her that he loved a boy in their class but knew it was ‘wrong’ and ‘evil’, showed her a love letter to the guy he’d written but never sent, then tore it up and threw it off the bridge. She tried to console him and that she didn’t think he was ‘wrong’ or ‘evil’. But he let dark thoughts take him that night and unalived himself. Gay kids (he wouldn’t have used that word in the 60s) are 5 times more likely to unalive themselves as straight kids. I don’t think it was a secret baby she gave birth to as her mom, who noticed when they didn’t wipe their feet, would have missed her daughter being months pregnant!

    • @sharonmulloy2181
      @sharonmulloy2181 Před 7 dny +15

      I found out a very close childhood friend had killed himself almost the same way. Sometimes parents are just clueless.

    • @Eastcoastforlife
      @Eastcoastforlife Před 7 dny +14

      @@RLucas3000 if it was a reaction to the movie, which it's not, you would be spot on. This is off the song, which doesn't cover a lot of the things you said. She sold the movie rights and someone else wrote the movie, filling in the questions about the song with their own ideas, very well I should add. Great song, good movie. 🙂

    • @56music64
      @56music64 Před 7 dny +30

      Was she pregnant, had an abortion, threw the "evidence" off the bridge and he later jumped out of guilt?? Not sure but that is my interpretation

  • @cbobwhite5768
    @cbobwhite5768 Před 7 dny +153

    You talk about how we've been sorta numbed to the terrible things around us. You need to know, Bobbie Gentry wrote this song 57 years ago.

  • @bridge1701
    @bridge1701 Před 7 dny +168

    In 1976, there was a movie made inspired by this song "Ode To Billy Joe". It stars Robby Benson and Glynnis O'Connor.

    • @randyjohnson6960
      @randyjohnson6960 Před 7 dny +4

      Only seen it twice Gr8 movie 🎬

    • @andreadeamon6419
      @andreadeamon6419 Před 7 dny +12

      Love that movie. Had stayed with me all these years. I just turned 57

    • @rubyslippers8215
      @rubyslippers8215 Před 7 dny +15

      I was too young when the song came out, but I remember seeing the movie. Robby Benson was a big teen heartthrob back in the day. I could be wrong, but I think the movie's writers "invented" a specific explanation for what happened and why that wasn't implied in the song.

    • @randyjohnson6960
      @randyjohnson6960 Před 7 dny +8

      @@andreadeamon6419 me too at 61

    • @vivienneclarke2421
      @vivienneclarke2421 Před 7 dny +4

      I just commented the same thing,I remember watching it when I was about 10. I'm glad I saw your comment,the female in it slipped my mind,I couldn't remember her name!

  • @gildahattabaugh4342
    @gildahattabaugh4342 Před 7 dny +225

    This song was huge. I'm 70 now. Some thoughts on the song from back in the day: when her mom mentioned she'd lost her appetite, a girl who looked like her with Billie Joe threw something off the bridge, Billie Joe jumps, a year later she's talking flowers to the bridge and throwing them into the river. Many believe her and Billie Joe were lovers, the thing was a miscarried baby, he could handle the grief, she was throwing flowers as a memorial. That was the most common belief. But, no one ever knew.

    • @TheOnespeedbiker
      @TheOnespeedbiker Před 7 dny +7

      As mentioned Gentry said there was no intention that the lyric was meant to show any more than the two were friends and spent time together. Any person that ever frequented a bridge with pedestrian traffic, especially over water knows there is a compulsion to toss rocks off the bridge and watch them fall to the bottom.

    • @jmariegmail8062
      @jmariegmail8062 Před 7 dny

      @@TheOnespeedbiker he was posting about popular belief at that time

    • @broncobra
      @broncobra Před 7 dny +12

      might not have been a miscarraige? There was a lot of shame back then of having a child out of wedlock.

    • @gina1433mhrj
      @gina1433mhrj Před 7 dny +11

      I'm 71and I agree with what you said. That's what everyone back in the 60's thought. At least all my friends in HS.

    • @margaretburnham5683
      @margaretburnham5683 Před 7 dny +8

      Oh wow! I'm 60 and grew up with this song. Figured they were romantic but never thought about the possibility of a baby. Eating as a family ever night... Would have been hard to hide a bump. Metal coat hanger anyone? If the song Creator said what was thrown is not relevant to the story we can rest easy on that one in this instance

  • @joe6913111111
    @joe6913111111 Před 29 dny +116

    this is from an interview from Bobby gentry herself As Gentry told Fred Bronson, “The song is sort of a study in unconscious cruelty. But everybody seems more concerned with what was thrown off the bridge than they are with the thoughtlessness of the people expressed in the song. What was thrown off the bridge really isn’t that important.
    “Everybody has a different guess about what was thrown off the bridge-flowers, a ring, even a baby. Anyone who hears the song can think what they want, but the real message of the song, if there must be a message, revolves around the nonchalant way the family talks about the suicide. They sit there eating their peas and apple pie and talking, without even realizing that Billie Joe’s girlfriend is sitting at the table, a member of the family.”

    • @xmathmanx
      @xmathmanx Před 7 dny +4

      Many more people kill themselves than are killed by others, this includes all wars, maybe we need to accept that suicide is common and not exceptional

    • @ellenstrack6274
      @ellenstrack6274 Před 7 dny +8

      I almost became one of the numbers, but thanks to my family and a very good psychologist a friend got me to, I am here. I realized my hurting myself would give my to be ex a win and satisfaction. He deserved neither...And I realised even years later when I ran into him my being alive still pissed him off..So happy to keep him pissed off.

    • @ednlible
      @ednlible Před 4 dny

      I should have read more comments before posting mine, I see you had already shared this article. 🫣

    • @joe6913111111
      @joe6913111111 Před 2 dny +1

      @@ednlible All Good the more posting it the more people learn

    • @velvetbees
      @velvetbees Před 2 dny

      This is excellent songwriting! It is a southern gothic masterpiece.

  • @jameswhitman8710
    @jameswhitman8710 Před 7 dny +224

    “. Gentry later clarified that she intended the song to portray the family's indifference to the suicide in what she deemed "a study in unconscious cruelty," while she remarked the object thrown was not relevant to the message.”
    Was produced in 1967

    • @emerje0
      @emerje0 Před 7 dny +8

      I always interpreted it as the pastor saw both of them up there and then maybe didn't see what went into the water but heard a splash and just assumed they threw something in never suspecting it was Billy Joe that went in. I also always thought she pushed him in, maybe accidentally, and that was why she didn't have an appetite, because she was feeling guilty and still felt guilty a year later which is why she goes back there and throws flowers into the water.

    • @ychaps
      @ychaps Před 7 dny +8

      @@emerje0 now that's something I never thought of😳

    • @JAMESMOORE-gq4vv
      @JAMESMOORE-gq4vv Před 7 dny +7

      For 30 years it never occurred to me that it was a baby.

    • @TheOnespeedbiker
      @TheOnespeedbiker Před 7 dny +6

      As mentioned, Gentry stated the lyric was simply to indicate a close relationship between the two, not some ghoulish murder.

    • @JAMESMOORE-gq4vv
      @JAMESMOORE-gq4vv Před 7 dny +1

      @@TheOnespeedbiker That's why music is so wonderful, IT'S LEFT TO THE LISTENER'S INTERPRETATION, it's not a documentary, go read a book.

  • @emerje0
    @emerje0 Před 7 dny +98

    You have to listen to "Harper Valley PTA" by Jeannie C. Riley, you will love it! It was written by Tom T. Hall, a legendary country singer/songwriter.

    • @justtere
      @justtere Před 7 dny +6

      I was going to suggest that. The story in that song is something else. The entire album was about Harper Valley.
      Please, please check this one out!

    • @melaniewestunfiltered
      @melaniewestunfiltered Před 7 dny +1

      ​@@justtere that's in my top 15 songs on my Playlist. My neighbors get concerts regularly. Brenda Put Your Bra On is on it too. Then it switches to something like Travis Bolt's Never Tried Cocaine.

    • @Zeb-gb2uk
      @Zeb-gb2uk Před 7 dny +5

      Tom T Hall is a giant master story teller nobody reacts to his music such a shame 😢

    • @tanyaglover2217
      @tanyaglover2217 Před 7 dny +3

      Beat me to it!! One of my faves. Also turned into a movie, starring Barbara Eden

    • @paigemprice
      @paigemprice Před 2 dny +1

      Haven't heard that in decades now I want to go find it. There's also a Harper Valley movie, stars Barbara Eden/I Dream of Jeannie

  • @mariajobson739
    @mariajobson739 Před 7 dny +66

    Even amidst the electric rock groups ,this song was out there and on the radio and we loved it !!!

  • @shirleymongold1201
    @shirleymongold1201 Před 7 dny +111

    This song has driven me nuts for over 50 years!!!! So many questions unanswered

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 Před 7 dny +9

      Thinking there might have been an unwanted pregnancy involved, but the preacher didn't say how large was what they threw off the bridge.

    • @hillarymustard105
      @hillarymustard105 Před 7 dny

      There is a book, I believe. Look it up. Maybe a movie too. Incredible story.

    • @dahuffy
      @dahuffy Před 7 dny +4

      Have you seen the movie? Answers a lot of those questions

    • @creinicke1000
      @creinicke1000 Před 7 dny +3

      Yes.. but its fiction.. and song leaves it unanswered

  • @Laniefj
    @Laniefj Před 7 dny +35

    I can relate to this song. The girl in the song is hurting, and her parents could care less. I think in those days emotions were hidden. We didn't show them. We "got over them." I can remember losing my best friend in a car accident when I was in the 9th grade. My mom wanted to know why I was still crying the next day!! I feel this song. Someone died by su*cide, and her parents are talking about food and work. Perfect reaction!!😢

  • @ouachitawoman
    @ouachitawoman Před 7 dny +47

    You nailed it again. It is all about the numbness of the conversation. Most people get caught up in wondering what was thrown off the bridge and that's not what's important, it's the numbness.

  • @wompa70
    @wompa70 Před 7 dny +38

    You’re the first reactor I’ve seen to comment on the casualness of the family talking about Billy Joe’s death at the dinner table. You got it before the blurb popped up, too.

  • @mikemaricle9941
    @mikemaricle9941 Před 7 dny +86

    Back in the day, for us country folk "Dinner" was the noon meal, in the evening we ate supper.

    • @justtere
      @justtere Před 7 dny +9

      I'm glad you mentioned this. Dinner was the big meal because of all the work done in the morning (pickin cotton and baling hay) and after dinner (40 acres daddy had to plow).

    • @erikduggins228
      @erikduggins228 Před 7 dny +8

      Still that way for me. (Dang I'm old.)

    • @kuntekinte6246
      @kuntekinte6246 Před 7 dny +5

      They still do that in my neck of woods.

    • @sandracox4341
      @sandracox4341 Před 7 dny +3

      We still do.

    • @PegAS52
      @PegAS52 Před 6 dny +5

      I still think of dinner as lunch and supper as the evening meal. I’m from Oklahoma. Folks here in Illinois think I’m ignorant.

  • @amykelly6870
    @amykelly6870 Před 7 dny +19

    Her voice, the strings and the guitar just draw you in and its amazing!!!

  • @MoonlightDagger
    @MoonlightDagger Před 29 dny +106

    Gentry didn't know why the real person who inspired the character of Billie Joe had killed himself, so she left it open for interpretation in the song.

    • @GGLee315
      @GGLee315 Před 7 dny +3

      If you’re referring to Emmett Till he did not kill himself, people killed him.

  • @patriciakeith6755
    @patriciakeith6755 Před 7 dny +36

    Bobbie Gentry was born 7/27/1942 in Chickasaw Co, Mississippi. She later married William F. (Bill) Harrah the casino magnate. Her second (and last) husband was country singer Jim Stafford. Her and Stafford had one child-a son. Then, as others have posted, Gentry dropped out of sight in 1982. Other songs of hers are-Fancy, He Made A Woman Out Of Me, Louisiana Man ,Chickasaw County Child, Niki Hoeky (video is a must). Plus many duets with Glen Campbell.

  • @elizabethfranco1284
    @elizabethfranco1284 Před 29 dny +31

    Not just one of the most iconic country songs but one of the most iconic in general.

  • @7spadefish7
    @7spadefish7 Před 7 dny +38

    She also wrote and sung “Fancy” about a poor mother turning her daughter out to survive.

  • @GR65330
    @GR65330 Před 7 dny +10

    As Bobby sang through the narrative, I could imagine myself sitting at the dinner table listening to the conversation.

  • @graemey
    @graemey Před 7 dny +13

    One line of thought was that she and Billy were throwing their stillborn baby off the bridge and that Billy was overcome with grief.

    • @chrislennon123
      @chrislennon123 Před 4 hodinami

      What makes you think it was stillborn? This is pre Roe Vs Wade and these are poor people in a state with a high rate of illiteracy. Farm work came before education, because that's what put food on the table. In a community where the preacher will pay surprise visits to families, and make sure the young people know they are being watched.

  • @tinacook6225
    @tinacook6225 Před 7 dny +26

    Love your reactions. Bobbie Gentry disappeared from the public after a 1982 interview. She also did duets with Glen Campbell that are worth a listen.

  • @lauraopper2571
    @lauraopper2571 Před 7 dny +25

    This song is amazing partly because of the way she wrote the dialog within the lyrics. It's so easy to imagine this conversation around the table as they share a meal, like the listener is sitting right there with them.

  • @joankisloski6972
    @joankisloski6972 Před 7 dny +23

    Bobbie Gentry's "Ode to Billie Joe" Written by Gentry is considered "Southern Gothic narrative" "FANCY" also written & recorded by Gentry. Is another great song about being born into Poverty outside New Orleans. Gentry song top 40 of Billboard Hot 100 and top 30 of the Billboard Country Chart. Reba McEntire's Cover Song took the song to #8 on the Billboard Country charts.

  • @anitawright7169
    @anitawright7169 Před 6 dny +5

    Such a very sad song sung by a very beautiful lady with a beautiful voice. I am 68 almost 69 and remember this so well. It gets me to crying. Love your reaction!

  • @JaneWalters-ni7se
    @JaneWalters-ni7se Před 7 dny +40

    Her exquisite voice....❤

    • @j.woodbury412
      @j.woodbury412 Před 7 dny +3

      I love her voice. It has a slight raspiness to it.

    • @aura81295
      @aura81295 Před 7 dny +3

      @@j.woodbury412 that raspiness brings more authentic emotion to the lyrics of the story IMO. The simplicity of the overall production makes for such a hauntingly beautiful piece.

    • @j.woodbury412
      @j.woodbury412 Před 7 dny +1

      @@aura81295 I agree.

  • @pvdogs2
    @pvdogs2 Před 7 dny +37

    Bobby Gentry said that 'Billy Joe' was inspired by a real person. When the story/song was made into a movie, she told the screenwriter that she didn't know why the real person jumped.

  • @renee5748
    @renee5748 Před 7 dny +25

    I grew up listening to Bobbie Gentry on the radio I believe it was 1968 when the song Louisiana Man was constantly on the radio. I bought her album called The Delta Sweete, and each of the songs were storytelling genius.

  • @zzblzmn
    @zzblzmn Před 5 dny +8

    Bobby Gentry is one first women to sing her own music

  • @allenruss2976
    @allenruss2976 Před 29 dny +13

    One of the the best story songs out there if not the best. She paints a complete picture

  • @Timoeltejano
    @Timoeltejano Před 7 dny +19

    I ran into her, literally, years back in Memphis (like 20 years ago) and said "oh, sorry... Wait, you're Bobbie Gentry.." She just smiles back and says..."maybe" and just kept on walking.
    My ex-wife was like, "you know her?"
    And I stare at her like she has two heads...
    There's a reason she's my ex..lol

  • @philsdon8932
    @philsdon8932 Před 7 dny +10

    Bobby Gentry wrote smash hits for other singers. "Son of a Preacher Man" and "Fancy" to name two.

    • @msparkerlovesmusic2609
      @msparkerlovesmusic2609 Před 5 dny +1

      Son of a Preacher Man was written and composed by American songwriters, John Hurley and Ronnie Wilkins.

  • @SoloGuitar1000
    @SoloGuitar1000 Před 7 dny +28

    To me, the "throwing something off the bridge" was just meant to show another piece of evidence that she and Billy Joe were a couple.
    It ties in with her talking to him at the church last Sunday and the recollection that Billy Joe liked to teased her when she was young (put a frog down her back).
    What they were throwing off the bridge was inconsequential. It could have been flowers or rocks. It was just to show they were spending time together.

  • @rubyslippers8215
    @rubyslippers8215 Před 7 dny +12

    That's why you're such a great reactor, BP - you, Sir, are a deep thinker. It's such is an eerily dispassionate song - and...Wow...so timelessly connected to today.

    • @terri2494
      @terri2494 Před 7 dny

      Yes, that was a great observation. 👍🏻

  • @jennyjenny4501
    @jennyjenny4501 Před 7 dny +12

    Gentry also wrote “Fancy”, famously covered by Reba McIntyre.

  • @ychaps
    @ychaps Před 7 dny +11

    SUCH a great song and so well sung...she is a true southern bell...

  • @allenruss2976
    @allenruss2976 Před 29 dny +23

    Released in 1967. I hope you bring in Don and Gen Z friends to show this to

  • @jayhank5838
    @jayhank5838 Před 7 dny +45

    No music tells a story like a country ballad. This is one of the all time greats. Bobby Gentry is like a mystery woman. She quit the business at an early age and became very private. One of the greatest talents of her era. Beautiful, talented and very rich, some say she is worth $100 million. That is a long way from Woodland, MS.

    • @tonkabeanpumpkin-fh4fz
      @tonkabeanpumpkin-fh4fz Před 6 dny

      I got so curious about her a year or so ago that I did some research. Bobbie is now 81 years old and lives with her grown son in a rather exclusive (gated, I think,) community in Tennessee. If I recall correctly, it's outside of Nashville.

  • @soniadenison1690
    @soniadenison1690 Před 4 dny +4

    Beautiful song, beautiful Bobbie Gentry! Beautiful voice! You are correct, it is a deep eerie song. ❤

  • @NativeNYerChicHK
    @NativeNYerChicHK Před 7 dny +29

    It’s a story how family’s don’t address important serious subject matters, they just gloss over stuff that makes them uncomfortable and pretend everything is just fine as their lives are literally falling apart around them. Pass the potatoes please.

  • @mariaarmindapinheirobarbar4885

    I am portuguese and when i was in school ,learning english this song was the 1st I chose to pick all the words (there was no google 50 years ago) and learned them all by heart to sing it to my teacher! I love it and still know by heart most of its words!

    • @TheDivayenta
      @TheDivayenta Před 7 dny

      Fantastic. Have you learned any Journey songs? Steve Perry is your fellow countryman- his folks came from the Azores. 😊

    • @mariaarmindapinheirobarbar4885
      @mariaarmindapinheirobarbar4885 Před 7 dny +1

      @@TheDivayenta I like Journey a lot and didn't know Steve Perry was half portuguese like Nuno Bettehcourt of Extreme!

  • @sherreywurz731
    @sherreywurz731 Před 7 dny +4

    Her voice gives me goosy bumps love ❤️ 😍

  • @chrismiller4348
    @chrismiller4348 Před 7 dny +3

    Love your thoughts!
    “Fancy”

  • @mariajobson739
    @mariajobson739 Před 7 dny +14

    GREAT, GREAT song...a cool story!

  • @CJ-Fischer
    @CJ-Fischer Před 4 dny +2

    This is just about as beautiful as music gets…

  • @Mandalore3737
    @Mandalore3737 Před 28 dny +7

    should listen to one tin soldier !!

  • @williambowman2326
    @williambowman2326 Před 7 dny +4

    Great reaction and it’s a testament to your common sense that you understood the underlying issues without getting caught up in the story. Another haunting aspect is how it subverts many modern stereotypes. We think that small town people are more concerned with each other, they have greater moral values ( think shout Mom and the preacher and the church references with nothing involving religion), that mental health is a big city problem…. Etc. But this eerie Southern mystery is not in Atlanta but the buckle of the Bible Belt. There is more concern for the food than the boy and the strong family has no clue that the daughter/sister is in pain. Superb reaction to a timeless and under the skin song.

  • @glennburch1081
    @glennburch1081 Před 5 dny +2

    Spot on reaction. the song released in 1967 and raced to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 in no time, charted for a very long time! The song was playing across multiple genre radio stations, rock, country, and Rythym and Blues. By year end in 1967 Ode to Billy Joe was resting at the #3 position on the US Billboard Hot 100.... that's crazy! the song was nominated for 8 Grammys, taking three between Bobby Gentry and arranger jimmie Haskel. I remeber first listening to this song in the back of my fathers 1963 station wagon as he drove us to football practice. The things we remember. Thanks for reacting.

  • @king_uber_milwaukee3034
    @king_uber_milwaukee3034 Před 6 dny +2

    She was an actual beauty queen. Strikingly beautiful

  • @gfaithowens1790
    @gfaithowens1790 Před 7 dny +9

    Although we never really found out for sure what was thrown off the bridge, or what led Billy Joe to then jump himself; what so many people miss in the story is the family set there eating and talking as if it were just the passing news of the day. But the girl was devastated. Momma states that she hadn't eaten a bite. And she gives all the back story that brother and her had been friends with Billy Joe since childhood. He had put a frog down her back and they had been talking after church. It even mentions that the pastor had seen the two of them together. The family was oblivious to it that Billy Joe was special to her and didn't realize the impact of his loss to her. She ends the song with picking flowers and dropping into the river.

  • @shirleynoble685
    @shirleynoble685 Před 7 dny +6

    A prime example of how easily humans forget. The album and the song won 3 Grammies the year it came out (1976) and yet so many reactors have never even heard of her. She was an incredibly talented and beautiful person who grew disenchanted by the music industry after about 10 years and retired to a very private life. But before she did, she also wrote “Fancy” which Reba McIntyre also made a very big hit. Another case of insightful social commentary.

  • @2727rogers
    @2727rogers Před 7 dny +4

    You just hit on the reason why I watch reaction vids. I want to hear what your take is on a song. How you feel about it. What it means to you. Your life experiences will be different than mine. You telling me how this song makes you feel will help me understand you better and may help me understand myself better as well. In my book that is a win win and wouldn't the world be a much better place if we just understood each other better.

  • @janbarrington7945
    @janbarrington7945 Před 5 dny

    I love this song. Bobby Gentry is so talented and has the most beautiful voice as well as a beautiful woman. I'm 62 and this song still tugs at my heart. This song was released in July/August 1967 by I believe Capital Records. I hope I'm remembering correctly. The music from that time period was awesome. Her story telling is amazing. I like your comment about eating at the table. That is something that needs to come back in style. Thank you for the memories. I've really been enjoying your reactions.

  • @snowbound23
    @snowbound23 Před 7 dny +8

    The haunting aspect of this song lies in our living in a world of many horrors and banalities. Vietnam era had many watching war on the evening news and going about living their lives the rest of the time. This song sorta captures it.

  • @aprilnewsome1932
    @aprilnewsome1932 Před 7 dny +4

    This is Awsome!!! I have loved this song my whole life!❤ when i was little my mom had this on a 45, and people were listening to cassette tapes. We would get into the record player and play this and House of the rising sun by the animals. Good times!❤❤ You gotta hear her sing (FANCY)❤❤❤❤❤❤ Oh and Reba done this song too and it was ( FANTASTIC), But i still love Bobby's original version too!

  • @dogsoldiertoo1099
    @dogsoldiertoo1099 Před 7 dny +9

    The song released in 1967 or 68. She sang on the demo that she presented to Capitol Records because it was cheaper than hiring someone. She was part owner of the Phoenix Suns until 1987.

  • @stacey3763
    @stacey3763 Před 7 dny +2

    She is still alive and has been a songwriter for others. Her grandson sings.

  • @Jellybean0009
    @Jellybean0009 Před 7 dny +3

    Gosh! You are listening to all of these songs from my childhood. I love it!

  • @mikematusek4233
    @mikematusek4233 Před 7 dny +4

    Smart talented woman. Another of her songs worth the hearing is Fancy, which Reba covered.

  • @chelisue
    @chelisue Před 7 dny +2

    You did it m. Thank you❣️

  • @RayDavies-zv5ic
    @RayDavies-zv5ic Před 6 dny

    Great, great reaction (and I have viewed many thousands) to a legendary performance.
    I well remember this hit song when it was first released (I am nearly 76) and have never forgotten it.

  • @toddmills2651
    @toddmills2651 Před 7 dny +3

    That might be the Best reaction EVER! Great Job!

  • @QB405
    @QB405 Před 7 dny +3

    This song is southern gothic storytelling through music at its finest.

  • @kimnapier8387
    @kimnapier8387 Před 4 dny

    This is a beautiful song that I have loved since I was a young girl. Thank you for your authentic reaction. It's refreshing ❤. This song does make you think

  • @damienross5013
    @damienross5013 Před 7 dny +2

    Great, great reaction. Spot on...One of the best "songs" ever written and performed. It's like reading a great Southern gothic novel.. What a storyteller.! Even as a 10 year old kid back in the 60's I fell in love with it,..It's just the whole atmosphere, vibe, voice....In three minutes you know all about these characters, the family and the way they live their life in the South...Just ordinary people living and eating at the Dinner tables (which you nailed also!).....You just don't know why Billy Joe jumped!!!! Amazing story and song...Very beautiful lady, beautiful voice.........Try reacting to her song FANCY (not Reba McIntyres cover), another great song and story

  • @Bijou2013
    @Bijou2013 Před 12 dny +8

    This was such a huge conversation in '76! I think they threw a still born baby off the bridge. Thats why a year later, she's throwing flowers off for her lost lover and child.

  • @videoinformer
    @videoinformer Před 7 dny +6

    I love how she implies far more than she comes right out and says, and how the implications grow to the climatic conclusion that can only be understood for how climactic it is by making inferences, not by what is explicitly said.
    "Child, what's happened to your appetite?" is the first indication of the relationship the young woman in this first-person story had with Billy Joe. (You can see the scene at the table, the girl looking down, quietly moving her food around the plate as the family discussion takes place.) At the conclusion, she tells us her father died recently, but she spends "a lot of time" picking and dropping flowers where Billy Joe died a year earlier.

  • @janicemacmillan2610
    @janicemacmillan2610 Před 2 dny

    Bobby Gentry got Grammys for this song. She looks just like my sister did in the sixties, it was from 1967. You should do her song Fancy too. She was an amazing artist, had her own tv show.

  • @busking6292
    @busking6292 Před 6 dny

    Stunning song,stunning interpretation,stunning talent !!

  • @cerisewilson4088
    @cerisewilson4088 Před 13 dny +4

    I grew up with this era of country music and this song always intrigued me. I always tried to imagine what was going on behind the scenes with this story.

  • @patconine9569
    @patconine9569 Před 7 dny +3

    She wrote most of her songs. Check out 'Fancy'. She wrote it, too.

  • @naiyomotion
    @naiyomotion Před 4 dny

    This is the first time I've come across this amazing song - thank you for sharing!

  • @heartwork8318
    @heartwork8318 Před 7 dny +1

    Amazing song! I remember my older sister singing it when I was a little kid. Great reaction BP. She was a great storyteller! ❤️‍🔥✌🏻🫶🏻

  • @gracemichelli.2am124
    @gracemichelli.2am124 Před 27 dny +4

    Iconic song 🔥

  • @Shortsac72
    @Shortsac72 Před 29 dny +5

    I'm trying to think which Country Singer sang "Bobby Joe Gentry, The Home Coming Queen".....
    It just hit me!
    EDIT... It took a few minutes for my ol noggin to figure it out.. Joe Diffe "Pickup Man"

  • @janyceseahorn4013
    @janyceseahorn4013 Před 4 dny

    One of my favorite songs. It makes you feel, good or bad. It is what is.

  • @rebeccapass701
    @rebeccapass701 Před 7 dny +1

    Song came out in July 67. It was big in both country and folk. It was a ɓig cross over into pop music as well. I only 7 at the time and could sing along to it when it came on the radio.

  • @nasus61movies
    @nasus61movies Před 7 dny +3

    Funny. I literally searched for this reaction a couple days ago and now here it is! Such a haunting song and lady.

  • @janesmith146
    @janesmith146 Před 7 dny +8

    The book is a phenomenal read and answers all the questions raised in the song. Nothing living, such as an infant, was tossed off the bridge, as many are suggesting here. It was a toy baby doll that she had as a child, and it was an accident. The reason Billy Joe offed himself.....well let's just say that "Brother Taylor" had a lot to do with it. He was a real dirty birdie. 😉

    • @mariajobson739
      @mariajobson739 Před 7 dny +2

      ???

    • @rubyslippers8215
      @rubyslippers8215 Před 7 dny +9

      It sounds like the book was a tie-in to the movie. It had nothing to do with the song. The "movie people" made up their own story. It had nothing to do with Gentry's open-ended story/song.

    • @sandirobinson6966
      @sandirobinson6966 Před 6 dny

      Yup. They made up a story so they could try to cash in on a movie. A REAL lame movie BTW.

  • @Uriahjw
    @Uriahjw Před 7 dny +1

    Bobby Gentry was one of my mom's favorite singers. She had a small town soulful voice.

  • @TripletDad3
    @TripletDad3 Před 7 dny +2

    The pacing of this song is perfect. She makes you lean in to the song as you hang on every word.

  • @tjtampa214
    @tjtampa214 Před 7 dny +3

    Yeah, sad song. I heard it as a kid watching TV country music shows and boy did I cry. Billy Joe & Bobbie Sue, typical names for kids in the country.😊

  • @mamaasaiz
    @mamaasaiz Před 7 dny +2

    Bobbie was a doll... and a really good songwriter... she wrote one called 'Fancy'... but if you react to it, do the Reba McEntire version... she really brings it to life.

  • @EGSimon-ds1vf
    @EGSimon-ds1vf Před 7 dny +1

    After all these years, this song still tugs at my heart with the same it intensity it had when I heard it as a young teen. You got the gist of the song. It certainly reflects how callous we've become to other people's tragedies. Beautiful, poignant song that is timeless.

  • @frannicole74
    @frannicole74 Před 7 dny +6

    The movie is amazing!! The story goes way deeper… Robbie Benson was the star

    • @rubyslippers8215
      @rubyslippers8215 Před 7 dny +2

      I remember the movie, too. The "movie guys" made up their own plot, none of which was presented in Gentry's song. She left the reasons behind the action open to endless speculation...It was never stated.

    • @frannicole74
      @frannicole74 Před 7 dny +1

      @@rubyslippers8215 that is very true I actually saw the movie before I heard the song …so I feel they are both amazing in their own right

  • @tupelohoney622
    @tupelohoney622 Před 20 dny +3

    She was born one county over from me in North Mississippi. Still the origin of this song, people have debated what Billy Joe and her threw off the bridge. The general agreement is it was a baby and Billy Joe jumped off the bridge out of guilt.

  • @starlaryer4165
    @starlaryer4165 Před 7 dny +2

    She also wrote Fancy a big hit for Reba McIntire - she had a big hit with it too in 1969

  • @tulelazule6914
    @tulelazule6914 Před 7 dny +2

    This woman! OMG

  • @jessietucker9342
    @jessietucker9342 Před 7 dny +3

    So, a movie was released based on this song back in the late 70s. But, it was an interpretation. Bobbie Gentry never confirmed what was thrown off that bridge, she wanted to let people come up with their own ideas.

  • @valeriecreech6208
    @valeriecreech6208 Před 7 dny +3

    I was 12 when the song came out. In my little mind, I assumed that she and Billy Joe were an item and it was a miscarried baby they threw off the bridge. Billy Joe couldn’t handle it, so he threw himself off the bridge. in the intervening year, she confessed all to her family. Her mother gave up maybe feeling guilt, her brother got married and moved away then dad died. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @billforrester5235
    @billforrester5235 Před 7 dny

    This song always gives me the goosebumps.

  • @lorrigaines4902
    @lorrigaines4902 Před 7 dny +1

    I’m so glad to see you found Bobbie Gentry and this gem!

  • @coreenavenn4235
    @coreenavenn4235 Před 7 dny +10

    Her Boufant hairstyle was fashionable in the 1960s. It give her a more modern look than most female country singers. Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, & Dolly Parton always started with a traditional country look.

  • @johncondon4081
    @johncondon4081 Před 7 dny +3

    She does make you feel like you are at the dinner table with the family

  • @Hogpapa4
    @Hogpapa4 Před 4 dny

    SUCH a great song… dark/eerie… the “strings” make it haunting… 👍🏻

  • @nepaledb
    @nepaledb Před 6 dny

    I'm 60, loved this song for a long time.
    Have you heard of an Australian band "the Divinyls" ? Great female lead singer Chrissy Amphlett r.i.p ☮️😎

  • @micheleosullivan4430
    @micheleosullivan4430 Před 7 dny +3

    There's a movie based on this song (Same name as the song). I was very young when I watched it. I just remember how sad it ended up.
    Still an amazing song!